10 Mass. App. Ct. 355 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1980
On May 10, 1979, the defendant appeared with counsel for trial in a District Court on complaints charging him with carrying a firearm (a handgun) under his control in a vehicle without being properly licensed, unlawful possession of a hypodermic syringe, receiving stolen property (the handgun) and larceny under $100. All of these offenses were within the final jurisdiction of the District Court. After a hearing, the District Court judge allowed the defendant’s motion to suppress and dismissed three of the charges. The judge found probable cause on the fourth charge, larceny under $100, and bound over the defendant to the Superior Court.
The defendant was thereafter indicted in the Superior Court on all four charges. The defendant filed a motion to
The pertinent facts may be summarized briefly. On February 21, 1979, the Concord police received a complaint regarding a stolen tennis racquet, along with a description of the person and the vehicle involved. Shortly thereafter the police observed the defendant’s vehicle
The defendant was placed under arrest and taken to the Concord police station. The defendant’s vehicle was also towed to the station, whereupon an “inventory search” was conducted. As a result of the search, the police discovered the handgun and the hypodermic syringe.
The Commonwealth argues that the allowance of the defendant’s motion to dismiss was error because the defendant was not twice placed in jeopardy for the same offenses. We disagree.
We agree with the result and reasoning of the Superior Court judge and concur in his finding that the District Court judge did not indicate at the outset, as he was required to do, whether the hearing was a trial on the merits or was merely for the purpose of determining probable cause. If we were to accept the Commonwealth’s characterization of the proceedings in the District Court, we would be creating a hybrid process, one neither to determine probable cause nor to decide the merits.
Although the District Court judge in the present case announced that he would dismiss three of the charges and decline jurisdiction on the larceny charge, it was not until the conclusion of the proceedings that he so indicated. A judge must at the outset “unambiguously manifest his intention to decline jurisdiction.” Commonwealth v. Crosby, supra at 683. On this record, there was no “indication that the [District Court judge] was declining jurisdiction sufficient to put this case beyond the reach of Clemmons.” Id. at 682.
In addition to the District Court judge’s failure to state unambiguously his intention to decline jurisdiction, it can be readily inferred from the conduct of the judge and both counsel in the course of the proceedings that the District Court had retained jurisdiction,
In sum, we agree with the Superior Court judge that jeopardy attached at the District Court proceeding and that the defendant, if put to trial anew, would be twice placed in jeopardy for the same offenses. Commonwealth v. Crosby, supra. Serfass v. United States, supra.
No question of “manifest necessity” or the “ends of public justice” is presented by the circumstances here. Commonwealth v. Crosby, supra. See Illinois v. Somerville, 410 U.S. 458, 459 (1973); Commonwealth v. Clemmons, supra at 292.
Order dismissing indictments affirmed.
It is not clear from the transcript or briefs whether the defendant had stopped his car on his own accord or had been stopped by the police.
In these circumstances there was no way for the defendant to know beforehand what the nature of the proceeding was. Cf. Commonwealth v. Clemmons, 370 Mass. 288, 291 n.2 (1976). It would also seem that fundamental fairness dictates that the Commonwealth ought to be required to state unequivocally at the outset of the hearing its intention.
It is evident from the transcript of the hearing that it was understood that the evidence on the motion to suppress would be used by the judge on the merits.
In this respect it can be observed that the judge found probable cause on the larceny complaint — the only one of the four charges which was not the subject of the motion to suppress.
Deciding as we do that the District Court judge retained jurisdiction, it is not necessary to determine the effect of the prosecutor’s and defense counsel’s presenting to a trier of fact in a court of competent jurisdiction an issue both acknowledged to be determinative of the case.
Not only would it have been less confusing, but the appropriate action for the District Court judge to have taken at this juncture would have been to enter findings of not guilty on these three complaints.
At the Superior Court hearing the assistant district attorney described the prosecutor’s conduct during the course of the District Court proceedings as “a bit serpentine.”